Nicholson v. . Serrill

131 S.E. 377, 191 N.C. 96, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 27, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 131 S.E. 377 (Nicholson v. . Serrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicholson v. . Serrill, 131 S.E. 377, 191 N.C. 96, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 13 (N.C. 1926).

Opinion

Connor, J.

On 11 April, 1921, defendant executed his note by which he promised to pay to the order of Anna C. Arnold, thirty-six months after date, the sum of seventeen hundred dollars, with interest from date at the rate of six per centum per annum, payable annually; on the same date defendant executed a chattel mortgage for the purpose of securing the payment of said note, by which he conveyed to Mrs. Anna C. Arnold certain articles of personal property described as follows: “One chest of drawers, rosewood, one bureau, one washstand, one bedstead of cherry, one set of springs, one wool mattress, two pillows, one eider-down quilt, *97 one very nice silk quilt, two nice single blankets, white, two army blankets, one table with dresser, mahogany, one oak Morris chair, upholstered in leather, one wicker rocker, one mahogany rocker, which has been painted maple, two straight walnut chairs, which need upholstering, one tapestry piece, one picture, two dead birds done on wood, 12 other pictures, one book case, one box of silver, some few pieces of silver, one trunk with sheets, pillow cases, table linen, etc., one trunk of toys, one trunk of books, one empty trunk, one steamer trunk, one barrel of china, all of this I have always paid taxes on, two vases.” This chattel mortgage was duly recorded on 12 April, 1921. There was no allegation or evidence that any payments had been made on the note secured therein.

On 3 June, 1921, Anna 0. Arnold made and published her last will and testament; she died at Ealeigh, N. 0., on 15 February, 1924, and thereafter said last will and testament was duly probated and recorded in Haywood County, where she resided. Plaintiffs, Alice E. Nicholson, Edward T. Clark and F. S. Ballard, appointed in said will as executors, have duly qualified as such. The other persons appointed as executors have not qualified, one, Chief Justice Walter Clark, having since died, and the other, Henry N. Clark, having renounced.

The interests of defendant, Pearson Bennett Serrill, in said will, arises from the following items and references therein to him:

“Second and third. In consideration of the love and affection I have for Pearson Bennett Serrill, whom I reared in my home from the time he was a small child until he reached his majority, I bequeath the sum of ($10,000) Ten Thousand Dollars in trust to be placed in the hands of ‘The Wachovia Bank & Trust Company’ of Asheville, North Carolina, as trustee for the use and benefit of the said Pearson Bennett Serrill. The said trustee is directed to place the said amount at interest to the best advantage, and the said trustee is directed to pay semiannually the interest at the best rate obtainable on said sum to the said Pearson Bennett Serrill until 1 July, 1955, and should the said Pearson Bennett Serrill be then living, then the whole amount with interest unpaid of said legacy shall be paid to him free of the trust, and should he die before that date said amount with any unpaid interest shall be paid to the lineal descendants of the said Pearson Bennett Serrill, if he has any, free of the trust; and in case he dies without lineal heirs, then it is my will that this said amount in the hands of the said trustees shall be freed from the trust and immediately become the property of Eev. J. D. Arnold’s children, Mrs. J. T. Schaaf, Mrs. E. C. Stearnes, Mrs. Pearl Arnold Townsend, Miss Virginia Arnold, Prof. M. H. Arnold, Prof. Benjamin William Arnold, or the heirs of any that may be dead, first to the lineal *98 beirs, and in ease of failure of lineal beirs, tben tbeir collateral beirs, wbo are entitled to receive it, and be discharged from tbe trust.
“Fourth. It is my will, if I should fail to leave sufficient money and personal property to pay legacies created in tbe preceding second and third paragraphs of this will, tben in tbe event I authorize and direct my executors to first collect and sell my notes and bonds, and secondly real estate, except 75 acres farm land devised to Henry N. Clark, either at public or private sale to bring a sufficient amount to pay said legacies, and it shall be their duty to do the same.”
“Nine. It is my will that whatever other personal estate which I may die possessed of which has not hereinbefore been disposed of that my executors hereinafter named shall use toward paying two legacies created in the second and third paragraphs of this will and in case there is not enough of said personal property to settle said legacies any over, then I bequeath any balance to my sister, Mrs. Alice E. Nicholson. To make it more certain should there not be enough of my personal property to pay said legacies not counting the personal property bequeathed to Mrs. Alice E. Nicholson in trust, my executors are directed to sell sufficient of my real estate to pay said legacies as it is my will that they shall be paid in any event and before anything else can be disposed of. What I left Pearson Bennett Serrill comes ahead of everything.”

By the eleventh paragraph of her will, testatrix gives and bequeaths to Pearson Bennett Serrill a number of articles of personal property, listed in detail, of the same character as those conveyed in the chattel mortgage executed by defendant to secure his note for $1,700 payable to the order of testatrix, consisting of books, furniture, jewelry, etc., such as are suitable exclusively for personal use, and whose value is dependent chiefly upon associations. She gives the books, in which the name of her father, David Clark, is written, to her nephew, David M. Clark. She gives her “handsome .lavaliere and chain” to her said sister for her natural life, and at her death to Pearson Bennett Serrill. In the twelfth paragraph she directs that “should Pearson Bennett Serrill die possessed of any or all this personal property and leave no lineal heirs, I wish said property to go to David C. Ballard’s lineal heirs.” The fourteenth paragraph is as follows:

“I especially charge Mrs. J. W. Nicholson and Col. W. J. Hannah, two of my executors, to see that Pearson Bennett Serrill gets all and everything I leave him and everything I intend him to have, also all things that are his and never were mine. Should there be any doubt, give him the benefit of the doubt.”

Testatrix gives and devises to her brother, Henry N. -Clark, seventy-five acres of her farm land in Halifax County, North Carolina, adjoining the lands formerly owned by Mrs. E. S. Ballard; the remainder of *99 ber farm sbe gives and devises to .ber brothers, Chief Justice Walter Clark, Henry N. Clark and Edward T. Clark, and to ber sisters, Mrs. Alice E. Nicholson, Mrs. Pattie C. Patterson, Mrs. Sallie C. Graham, Miss Lucy N. Clark, and to ber nephew, David 0. Ballard, as tenants-in-common. Her land in Haywood County sbe gives and devises to brothers and sisters and ber brother-in-law, F. S. Ballard. All the residue of ber. estate wheresoever same is situate or found, sbe gives and devises to the children of Rev. J. D. Arnold, ber step-children, or their lineal heirs.

The court was of the opinion that plaintiffs, as executors of Mrs. Anna 0.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.E. 377, 191 N.C. 96, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholson-v-serrill-nc-1926.